January
17, 2006
UC San
Diego Partners with Venter Institute to Build
Community Cyberinfrastructure for Advanced Marine
Microbial Ecology Research and Analysis
Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation Awards
$24.5 Million Grant to Advance Metagenomics Research
By Doug Ramsey
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| Larry
Smarr, Director, Calit2 and Principal Investigator,
CAMERA |
Researchers
at UCSD will build a state-of-the-art computational
resource and develop software tools to decipher the
genetic code of communities of microbial life in the
world’s oceans. The new resource will help scientists
understand how microbes function in their natural ecosystems,
enable studies on the effect humans are having on the
environment, as well as permit insight into the evolution
of life on Earth. The UCSD Division of the California
Institute for Telecommunications and Information Technology
(Calit2) will lead the project in partnership with J.
Craig Venter Institute (Venter Institute) in Rockville,
MD, and UCSD’s Center for Earth Observations and
Applications (CEOA) at Scripps Institution of Oceanography.
“This
prototype cyberinfrastructure will be used by scientists
studying marine life and ecosystems to examine—in
an unprecedented manner—the genomic complexities
of natural communities of micro-organisms as they have
evolved in their local environments,” said UCSD
Chancellor Marye Anne Fox. “This project will
change the way large-scale science can be conducted
and we are proud to develop this world-class and pioneering
facility on our UCSD campus.”
 |
Sorcerer
II circumnavigation route |
The Gordon
and Betty Moore Foundation has awarded $24.5 million
over seven years to create the Community Cyberinfrastructure
for Advanced Marine Microbial Ecology Research and Analysis
(CAMERA). Scientists will use CAMERA for metagenomics
research—analyzing microbial genomic sequence
data in the context of other microbial species, as well
as in comparison to a variety of other “metadata”
such as the chemical and physical conditions in which
microbes are sampled.
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| Craig
Venter (left) sampling in Sargasso Sea with Tony
Knapp, director of Bermuda Biological Station for
Research |
“The
explosion of data from the collection and sequencing
of marine microbes requires a completely novel approach
to storing, accessing, mining, analyzing, and drawing
conclusions from this rich new wealth of information,”
said co-investigator J. Craig Venter, Ph.D., president
of Venter Institute. “The goal is to create a
community resource to house all metagenomic data that
will facilitate and advance knowledge of marine microbial
ecology, other natural environments, and evolutionary
biology.”
The CAMERA
project builds on pioneering efforts in metagenomics
to sequence the genomes of entire microbial communities,
often comprising thousands of species. The largest such
effort is Venter Institute’s Sorcerer II Expedition,
for which sequencing is funded by the Moore Foundation.
The Expedition is developing the first large-scale genomic
survey of microbial life in the world’s oceans
to produce the largest gene catalogue ever assembled.
Sorcerer II is expected to more than double the number
of protein sequences currently available in the National
Institutes of Health’s GenBank. The metagenomics
database will include new sequences, genes and gene
families, together with their annotations and associated
environmental metadata.
 |
| Slide
with bacteria from Venter Institute’s Sorcerer
II Expedition |
The move from
traditional organism genome databases to the CAMERA-based
environmental metagenomics data storage and computational
complex requires development of a more complex cyber-architecture.
Using dedicated optical circuits, CAMERA will permit
scientists to connect their local laboratory PC clusters
directly to the CAMERA database and tools using the
National LambdaRail or international optical circuits,
resulting in up to a hundred-fold increase in bandwidth
over current standards.
The enhanced
connectivity is based on a model pioneered by the OptIPuter
project and funded by the National Science Foundation.
“Linking Venter Institute to Calit2 will be the
first persistent application of the OptIPuter high-performance
‘collaboratory’,” said Calit2 director
Larry Smarr, Ph.D., principal investigator on both the
OptIPuter and CAMERA projects. “The architecture
is quite general and will be quickly adaptable to other
areas of data-intensive science.” Collaboratories
are virtual laboratories where scientists can collaborate
on research from dispersed locations—interacting
with colleagues, accessing instrumentation, sharing
data and computational resources, and accessing information
from remote digital libraries.
Calit2 will
also partner with UCSD’s San Diego Supercomputer
Center (SDSC) to create a next-generation science data
server complex, which couples the Calit2 and SDSC middleware,
compute, and storage capabilities with the NSF’s
TeraGrid distributed, high- performance computing facility
in a unified Service Oriented Architecture. SDSC’s
Philip Papadopoulos noted that, “the CAMERA complex
will have a thousand processors of dedicated local cluster
computing and several hundred terabytes of replicated
data storage, backed up by the SDSC and TeraGrid high
performance compute and storage complexes.” This
will enable “scalable computing” resources
to be applied to a wide range of computational tools
to tackle the computationally intense questions derived
from the larger metagenomic data collection.
Calit2 and
Venter Institute will also support a series of training
sessions and specialized seminars on this emerging discipline,
as well as provide space for environmental metagenomics
visitors to collaborate with CAMERA specialists. Over
the next few years, CAMERA is expected to include other
environmental or medical metagenomic datasets, as the
novel cyberinfrastructure enables research in other
disciplines.
The Moore Foundation
grant, in part, contributes to the $1 billion fundraising
goal of The Campaign for UCSD: Imagine What's Next.
Media Contacts:
Doug
Ramsey, Calit2, (858) 822-5825
Melanie
Wranaker, Venter Institute, (301) 943-8879
Mario Aguilera or Cindy Clark,
Scripps/CEOA, (858) 534-3624
Ashley Wood, SDSC,
(858) 534-8363
Alex Barnum,
Moore Foundation, (415) 561-7414
Debra Kain, UCSD
Health Sciences, (619) 543-6163
Background
The goal
of the CAMERA project is to create important advances
in the knowledge of evolutionary biology and microbial
ecology in marine and other natural environments.
“Metagenomics
has the potential to revolutionize our understanding
of microbial ecology in a large number of environments,”
said David Kingsbury, Ph.D., chief program officer for
science at the Moore Foundation. “The major factor
limiting its further progress has been the management
of the very large quantities of data. We are delighted
to be able to support the development of this community
resource at one of the world’s premier sites for
high-speed networking and high-performance scientific
computing.”
In addition
to Sorcerer II’s ecological genomic data, the
CAMERA database will be augmented by the soon-to-be-completed
genomes of more than 150 critical marine microbes, also
funded by the Moore Foundation, for comparative genomics
studies. Venter Institute’s Marv Frazier, Ph.D.,
co-principal investigator with Larry Smarr, said “We
are looking forward to providing a metagenomics server
complex for the data produced by our colleagues at the
Department of Energy’s Joint Genome Institute.”
Scripps researchers
will contribute expertise in modeling, analysis and
information management across Earth-science observing
systems. “We also have a set of world-class researchers
in microbial ecology and annotating marine genomic data,”
said Scripps Deputy Director John Orcutt, who directs
the CEOA and is a co-investigator on the new project
along with Terry Gaasterland, director of the Scripps
Genome Center launched last October. Experts at Venter
Institute and the Scripps Genome Center will create
annotations for much of the CAMERA genomic data.
The project
brings together new technologies of high-throughput
DNA sequencing and metagenomic analysis tools on the
one hand, and cyberinfrastructure innovations on the
other. Together, they will provide new tools to help
marine microbial ecologists access and derive inferences
from the massive data sets. The tools will allow ecologists,
for example, to analyze families of proteins and conduct
comparative analyses across multiple genomes.
“Each
individual sequence is no longer just a piece of a genome.
It is part of an entire biological community,”
said Peter Arzberger, Ph.D., director of the NIH-funded
National Biomedical Computation Resources (NBCR), and
lead author of the CAMERA grant proposal. “CAMERA
will build on the NBCR software tools and user portal
to explore the metagenomics data.”
NBCR has links
to the UCSD School of Medicine, and co-investigator
John Wooley is affiliated with the Skaggs School of
Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences. “Along with
providing a novel approach to advancing fundamental
biological knowledge, analysis of the marine genome
data will allow us insight into natural marine products
and how they can be applied for pharmacy and medicine,”
said Wooley, the university’s Associate Vice Chancellor
for Research. “The new resource will greatly enhance
our health science researchers’ ability to advance
the development of new drugs and therapies from the
ocean’s resources to combat cancer and neurodegenerative
and other diseases.”
Venter Institute
will make available a large collection of community-developed
genome analysis software tools. The CAMERA tools will
address the needs of two groups of users. The first
group comprises potential users with little programming
ability using web-based tools to explore data and visualization
tools to interpret the results. The second group comprises
bioinformatics experts with their own tools and programming.
CAMERA will encourage this later group to contribute
their software analysis tools, thus engaging the broader
community in strengthening this international resource.
Other co-investigators
on the CAMERA project include Venter Institute’s
Saul Kravitz, Aaron Halpern and Jonathan Eisen, as well
as UCSD-based scientists Tom DeFanti and Ingolf Krueger.
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